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The Notion of Unbelief in Ancient Greece: Condemning and Persecuting Atheistic Positions in Classical Athens
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Ramón Soneira Martínez
Published/Copyright:
September 2, 2022
Online erschienen: 2022-09-02
Erschienen im Druck: 2022-09-02
© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Title pages
- Contents
- I. The Benefit of Doubt. Between Skepticism and Godlessness, Critique or Indifference in Ancient Mediterranean Religious Traditions
- I. The Benefit of Doubt. Between Skepticism and Godlessness, Critique or Indifference in Ancient Mediterranean Religious Traditions
- Introduction
- Hittites and Their Oracles: They Believed in Them, Although They Did Not Trust Them
- Doubting Priests and Practitioners in Ancient Egyptian Religion
- Doubt’s Polysemy: Atheism, Skepticism, and Theorizing Religion in Greek Antiquity
- “Religion is dying”. Doubting the Divine in Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus
- The Notion of Unbelief in Ancient Greece: Condemning and Persecuting Atheistic Positions in Classical Athens
- Normativizing Ancient Greek Religion: Lament as Blasphemy in Plato’s Laws
- Doubting Deification of a Mortal in Rome: The Case of Julius Caesar
- Dimensions of Godlessness in the Roman Empire
- Calling the Parousia into Question: Doubters and Skeptics in Some Early Christian Texts
- Chatting with God and the Benefit of the Doubt
- II. Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt
- II. Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt
- Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt: The Case of the God Shed
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Title pages
- Contents
- I. The Benefit of Doubt. Between Skepticism and Godlessness, Critique or Indifference in Ancient Mediterranean Religious Traditions
- I. The Benefit of Doubt. Between Skepticism and Godlessness, Critique or Indifference in Ancient Mediterranean Religious Traditions
- Introduction
- Hittites and Their Oracles: They Believed in Them, Although They Did Not Trust Them
- Doubting Priests and Practitioners in Ancient Egyptian Religion
- Doubt’s Polysemy: Atheism, Skepticism, and Theorizing Religion in Greek Antiquity
- “Religion is dying”. Doubting the Divine in Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus
- The Notion of Unbelief in Ancient Greece: Condemning and Persecuting Atheistic Positions in Classical Athens
- Normativizing Ancient Greek Religion: Lament as Blasphemy in Plato’s Laws
- Doubting Deification of a Mortal in Rome: The Case of Julius Caesar
- Dimensions of Godlessness in the Roman Empire
- Calling the Parousia into Question: Doubters and Skeptics in Some Early Christian Texts
- Chatting with God and the Benefit of the Doubt
- II. Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt
- II. Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt
- Divine Names and Titles in Ancient Egypt: The Case of the God Shed